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overview Dr. Erik R. Svendsen received his PhD in Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health from the University of Iowa, where he completed doctoral studies in environmental epidemiology and exposure science with a special research focus on environmental lung diseases. After graduation Dr. Svendsen was selected for a prestigious post-doctoral fellowship with the US EPA in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. While in Chapel Hill Dr. Svendsen directed two large collaborative studies with researchers from the EPA and both the schools of public health and medicine at the University of North Carolina’s Center for Environmental Medicine, Asthma, and Lung Biology in studying the health effects of air pollution on asthmatic children and adults. Dr. Svendsen later became a Research Assistant Professor at the University of South Carolina, where he also served as the State Environmental Epidemiologist for SC DHEC for 7 years. Over that time period he further developed expertise in disaster epidemiology, having led the public health recovery and research in the Graniteville chlorine disaster population and led the pulmonary epidemiology studies in a pediatric cohort exposed to radiation from the Chernobyl disaster. Dr. Svendsen then joined the Disaster Management program at the Tulane University School of Public Health & Tropical Medicine as an Associate Professor in the Department of Global Environmental Health Sciences where he taught in several environmental and occupational health or epidemiology courses over a 4-year period. While at Tulane he held a secondary affiliation with the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Environmental Medicine. Dr. Svendsen joined MUSC in July 2015 as a Professor to lead the new Division of Environmental Health within the Department of Public Health Sciences. At MUSC he holds a secondary affiliation with the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine and is the Graduate Training Director for the Epidemiology Division. He is continuing his epidemiological research of disasters and environmental lung disease there at MUSC. Pubmed bibliography: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/myncbi/browse/collection/41668820/?sort=date&direction=descending
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Svendsen, Erik
Item TypeName
Concept Asthma
Academic Article Asthma and farm exposures in a cohort of rural Iowa children.
Academic Article Circulating neutrophil CD14 expression and the inverse association of ambient particulate matter on lung function in asthmatic children.
Academic Article Variability in childhood allergy and asthma across ethnicity, language, and residency duration in El Paso, Texas: a cross-sectional study.
Academic Article Early-life antibiotic use is associated with wheezing among children with high atopic risk: a prospective European study.
Grant Environmental Determinants of Pulmonary Disease: A new approach to an old problem
Grant Deactivating Indoor Allergens Associated with Childhood Asthma
Grant Allergens and Induced Asthma: Eradicating Indoor Allergens from Dust Mites (Phase
Grant Allergens and Induced Asthma: Eradicating Indoor Allergens and Dust Mites
Academic Article Quantitative PCR analysis of molds in the dust from homes of asthmatic children in North Carolina.
Academic Article Coarse particulate matter (PM2.5-10) affects heart rate variability, blood lipids, and circulating eosinophils in adults with asthma.
Academic Article The role of the indoor environment: Residential determinants of allergy, asthma and pulmonary function in children from a US-Mexico border community.
Academic Article A Bayesian spatio-temporal analysis of neighborhood pediatric asthma emergency department visit disparities.
Academic Article A geographic identifier assignment algorithm with Bayesian variable selection to identify neighborhood factors associated with emergency department visit disparities for asthma.
Academic Article Correction to: A geographic identifier assignment algorithm with Bayesian variable selection to identify neighborhood factors associated with emergency department visit disparities for asthma.
Academic Article Using Bayesian time-stratified case-crossover models to examine associations between air pollution and "asthma seasons" in a low air pollution environment.
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  • Asthma